Ethnoelephantology and The Multispeces Turn- New Approaches to Human-Elephant Relations

dc.contributor.authorLocke P
dc.date.accessioned2018-06-26T01:44:15Z
dc.date.available2018-06-26T01:44:15Z
dc.date.issued2014en
dc.date.updated2017-07-05T23:43:06Z
dc.description.abstractHumans and elephants have lived together and shared space together in diverse ways for millennia. The intersections between these thinking and feeling species have been differently explored, for different reasons, by disciplines across the sciences, humanities, and social sciences. Such disciplinary divisions, predicated on oppositions of human/animal and nature/culture, are integral to the configuration of modernist thought. However, posthumanist and biocultural thinking questions the underlying epistemological conventions, thereby opening up interdisciplinary possibilities for human-animal studies. In relation to issues of conflict and coexistence, this paper charts the emergence of an interdisciplinary research programme and discursive space for human-elephant intersections under the rubric of ethnoelephantology. Recognizing continuities between the sentient and affective lifeworlds of humans and elephants, the mutual entanglements of their social, historical, and ecological relations, and the relevance of combining social and natural science methodologies, it surveys recent research from anthropology, history, and geography that exemplifies this new approach.en
dc.identifier.citationLocke P (2014). Ethnoelephantology and The Multispeces Turn- New Approaches to Human-Elephant Relations. 18pp-.en
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/10092/15598
dc.language.isoen
dc.subjecthuman-elephant relationsen
dc.subjectethnoelephantologyen
dc.subjectmultispecies ethnographyen
dc.subjectmore-than-human geographyen
dc.subjecttrans-species historyen
dc.subjectcaptive elephant managementen
dc.subjectelephant conservationen
dc.subjecthuman-elephant conflicten
dc.subject.anzsrcField of Research::20 - Language, Communication and Culture::2002 - Cultural Studies::200299 - Cultural Studies not elsewhere classifieden
dc.subject.anzsrcField of Research::16 - Studies in Human Society::1601 - Anthropology::160199 - Anthropology not elsewhere classifieden
dc.titleEthnoelephantology and The Multispeces Turn- New Approaches to Human-Elephant Relationsen
dc.typeDiscussion / Working Papersen
Files
Original bundle
Now showing 1 - 1 of 1
No Thumbnail Available
Name:
Ethnoelephantology and The Multispecies Turn- New Approaches to Human-Elephant Relations.docx
Size:
144.43 KB
Format:
Unknown data format